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Voyageurs National Park Biologists Looking For a Few Good Moose to Collar For Climate-Change Studies

Fourteen moose in Voyageurs National Park soon will be wearing radio collars that could help shed some light on how the animals are dealing with climate change. NPS photo.

If all goes as expected, 14 moose that roam Voyageurs National Park soon will be wearing the latest in radio-collar technology. Not only will the collars track the animals' movements, but they're expected to shed some light on how the moose are reacting to climate change as they'll also keep tabs on the air temperature wherever the moose roam.

Park biologists will be working this month to attach the collars as part of a continuing project to investigate the potential effects of climate change and other factors on the long-term viability of moose in the park. The project is a collaborative effort among scientists from Voyageurs National Park, the University of Minnesota-Duluth’s Natural Resources Research Institute, and the U.S. Geological Survey.

Once wearing the collars, the moose will be easy to track, as the GPS receivers on the collars will record each animal’s position every 15 minutes, and those movements will be transmitted daily to "project investigators via the ARGOS satellite system, providing a remote system to monitor animal movements in near real-time. Standard VHF transmitters are part of each collar and can signal when a moose has died to allow quick retrieval of the collar and a determination of death, if possible," park officials said in a release. "Each collar is also fitted with external temperature and activity sensors. The collars are capable of storing up to 14 months of location, sensor, and activity data. Collars will be retrieved when animals are recaptured in February 2011."

Biologists at Voyageurs are concerned about the long-term viability of its moose population given recent declines in moose populations in other parts of Minnesota and adjacent Ontario. Among factors possibly causing these declines are chronic stress related to warmer summer and winter temperatures and lethal effects of parasites transmitted by white-tailed deer such as brainworm and liver flukes, the park said.

“Moose seek cooler temperatures on hot summer days. We will use GPS radio collars to measure movement, activity, and habitat use by moose in Voyageurs National Park over the next two years,” said Dr. Ron Moen, Biologist at the Natural Resources Research Institute of the University of Minnesota Duluth. “We will be able to identify forest types that moose use as thermal cover when it is too hot for them to feed.”

Nine females and five males will be captured using net-guns fired from a single helicopter. Netted animals are carefully restrained to allow handlers to safely attach collars and collect data related to animal health, the park said. Blood and fecal samples will also be collected from each moose as part of a collaborative effort with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources to assess moose population health throughout the State. The capture operation will be conducted by a private company, Leading Edge Aviation, that specializes in the capture of wild animals from helicopters. Wildlife veterinarians from the Minnesota Zoo and Minnesota Department of Natural Resources will also be on-site. Net-gunning is considered a safe and approved technique for capture of large mammals such as moose, the park said

Voyageurs protects a moose population of between 50-90 animals based on recent surveys. Twenty-five moose were sighted during an aerial moose survey completed in January. Six calves were seen and most bulls had dropped their antlers. It is difficult to see moose in late winter in the mixed conifer forests that cover much of the park. As a result, less than 50 percent of moose actually present are seen during aerial surveys. Personnel from the U.S. Forest Service and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources assisted with the aerial survey.

Two-hundred-eighty white-tailed deer were also observed during the survey. Deer numbers have generally increased in northern Minnesota in the last 20 years. The study will assess changes in the relative number and distribution of deer within the park over that time. It will also examine the prevalence of brainworm and liver flukes in deer within the park. These parasites can be fatal to moose but rarely affect deer.
If you have any questions about the collaring program, you can contact Dr. Steve Windels at 218-283-9926.

Comments

It's the new thing for scientist & biologists to get money to keep them busy and pay for all this stuff. OMG what up with all the monitoring? STOP already. The biologists and all those departments need to understand that they are totally stressing out these wild animals. Scaring them with low, overhead helicopters and airplanes. Shooting them as they run for their lives with their families is stressful and dangerous. Just because you can, doesn't mean you should! How would you like to be brought down with a drugged dart and collared? Those collars are never retrieved. One hunter shot a mountain lion and hit the collar which exploded the battery on the cat and burned him terribly until the hunter shot him again. How cruel was that? I hold all those departments responsible for all the cruelty they're doing to wildlife. Did you hear that? Wildlife!

Marshall Dillon:
Plenty of bears in northern Minnesota, though you're right, not grizzlies. Black bears are fairly plentiful, though. Lots of us in the area have been watching "Lily" give birth to a cub...first time it's ever been captured on camera. Though, if you don't like the collars, perhaps a webcam outside of her den will offend some of you too.

I thought about visiting Minnesota a few times and researched where I might visit. Actually - my mind sort of wandered to some other place where there are moose, and I mixed up my national parks. In my previous comment I was thinking of Isle Royale, which has apparently has moose but no bears.

I've definitely heard of the North American Bear Center and their star attraction Ted the bear.

Plenty of bears in northern Minnesota, though you're right, not grizzlies. Black bears are fairly plentiful, though. Lots of us in the area have been watching "Lily" give birth to a cub...first time it's ever been captured on camera. Though, if you don't like the collars, perhaps a webcam outside of her den will offend some of you too.

Voyageurs is just a few hours from Ely, where the North American Bear Center is located; no one has said where Lily is, as to protect her, it is a lot of the same ecosystems, from Voyageurs, to Ely, all the way through the Boundary Waters to the great Lake Superior.

Certainly with bears, the ones most likely to be collared are the "repeat offenders" that prefer human food. However - in the various ranger programs I've been to, I've learned that some of these devices are designed to disengage after a certain period of time.

Seeing a California condor at the Grand Canyon was an amazing experience. It frankly didn't bother me that they had these big 'ol numbered tags if it helped with their reintroduction into the wild. Most of the Tule elk at Point Reyes have ear tags.

I realize that Voyageurs doesn't have bears - and especially not grizzlies. However - I've saw a brief piece on moose/bear interactions in Anchorage last night. They showed some amazing stuff like the partial remains of a moose brought down by a brown bear. I'm wondering if they've taken any consideration of how these types of tracking devices might affect potential predators.

Wildlife aren't just there for the viewing pleasure of Man. Part of the mission of the National Park system is to keep natural systems intact, irrespective of humans. It's also hard to protect something if you don't understand how it behaves/works/functions...